China Daily (Hong Kong)

It is time to recognize HK Chinese as Chinese

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Hong Kong is largely a homogenous society; ethnically most residents identify themselves as Chinese. Legally speaking, however, that’s another story. The city’s population was approximat­ely 7.31 million in 2015. The vast majority are of Chinese descent but foreign nationals comprise 8.5 percent — a significan­t minority.

We also have to be careful to identify all people of Chinese descent as Chinese. The Nationalit­y Law of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) maintains that Hong Kong residents who are of Chinese descent and born in Chinese territorie­s (including Hong Kong) are Chinese nationals. This is a very generous definition. It is so generous that it is prone to abuse.

The same law also stipulates that the PRC does not recognize dual nationalit­y for any Chinese national. Chinese nationals of the special administra­tive region who have right of abode in foreign countries may, for the purpose of traveling, use relevant documents issued by foreign government­s.

However, they will not be entitled to consular protection in the SAR and other parts of China on account of holding these documents.

In practice, many Chinese nationals in Hong Kong have more than “right of abode” in foreign countries, and use their documents for purposes far beyond “traveling”. But perhaps out of concern that if asked to renounce their foreign citizenshi­p, some Hong Kong Chinese would have resisted, the government has always been lenient toward these de facto dual nationalit­y cases.

Discrimina­tion and injustice toward ethnic minorities in the city are exposed from time to time. Although what has been done is far from enough, it is now generally recognized that ethnic minorities, especially non-white ones, encounter hardships in everyday life, particular­ly in financial and housing services.

The former practice of putting ethnic minorities into designated schools, which ended some years ago, was widely criticized as it segregated them from the Chinese population for more than a decade.

Right now, the government is prioritizi­ng provision of teaching Cantonese as a second language to non-native speakers as a means of empowering them.

What is never discussed, however, is what it means to be a Chinese national in the SAR.

We want to instill patriotism among Hong Kong people, which of course is important, but the issue is not that simple. What does patriotism mean to the foreign nationals living here as permanent residents?

With a foreign judge recently facing criticism over his sentencing of seven The author is a veteran current affairs commentato­r.

To foster patriotism in Hong Kong, we must change how we look at and treat its indigenous Chinese nationals.

police officers, this basic question can no longer be ignored.

Patriotism is first and foremost a sense of identity. If we want Chinese nationals in Hong Kong to identify themselves as Chinese, the only effective way is to make them feel they are different from foreign residents in the city.

In short, they should be subject to a set of rights and responsibi­lities which is not the same as that of foreign residents, but has more in common with that of their compatriot nationals on the Chinese mainland.

The approach I advocate is the opposite of current policy and practice. The “privileges” that Chinese nationals in Hong Kong enjoy are few and remote. They are mainly political rights, such as eligibilit­y for office of the Chief Executive.

In everyday life, Chinese nationals in Hong Kong are constantly reminded that they share more similariti­es with the foreign residents (including Chinese holding foreign passports) in Hong Kong than with their compatriot­s on the mainland.

That’s not what “One Country, Two Systems” is supposed to mean.

We should rethink many existing arrangemen­ts. Take foreign investment enterprise­s (FIEs) for example. FIEs face tight government regulation over almost all aspects of their business; this limits efficiency and restricts a foreign company’s ability to profit from foreign ventures and reduces the control a foreign parent has over the FIE.

If a Hong Kong Chinese national forms a company on the mainland, it is automatica­lly an FIE even though he or she may have raised all the capital from within the mainland — ie, no “foreign capital” involved.

To foster patriotism in Hong Kong, we must change how we look at and treat its indigenous Chinese nationals.

It is time for a rethink on the rights of Hong Kong Chinese nationals.

 ?? @THCOSWARD / INSTAGRAM ?? A worker on a pedestrian bridge in Central is silhouette­d against the sunlit General Post Office; bright light creates an interestin­g texture of light and shadow on the curtain wall and round windows of Jardine House.
@THCOSWARD / INSTAGRAM A worker on a pedestrian bridge in Central is silhouette­d against the sunlit General Post Office; bright light creates an interestin­g texture of light and shadow on the curtain wall and round windows of Jardine House.
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